Saturday 28 February 2015

Really Useful Bag

I've been playing around with various scarf designs over the past week, working with different yarns, hook sizes and tension.  This was my first attempt, and whilst the design itself works fine, the yarn is very scratchy.  Not very comfy to wear!

So I decided to re-cycle it, and came up with this bag design instead.

© Hooker Chick

If you're a novice hooker, this is a good project for learning basic decreasing and increasing ~ essential for making jumpers, cardigans, and other shaped garments.  You will need around 700 yds of aran weight yarn (I used Plymouth Yarn Boko, which is a 95% wool 5% silk mix, but I think the bag would work well in a wool/cotton mix too), a 4.5mm hook, a darning needle, and some contrasting yarn to mark stitches.

Abbreviations as follows:

st - stitch
sts - stitches
ch - chain
dc - double crochet (UK)
tr - treble (UK)

To begin, make a slip-knot and ch 49, keeping your tension very loose ... 

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Next, (in normal tension) ch 3, tr into top of st 49 ...

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Continue to tr into top of each st to end of foundation chain (50 sts in all including the beginning 3 ch).

Second row, ch 3, tr into first space and continue to end of row (you should still have 50 sts including the beginning 3 ch).  Repeat for further 76 rows.

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Using darning needle, neatly seam short sides together.

Next, join bottom edge like this (please excuse my rubbish videoing technique, I'll get better at it, promise) ~







Count 16 sts either side of seam at top edge and mark (32 stitches in all).  Count 8 sts from markers and mark.  This should give you 32 sts, 7 sts, 32 sts, 7 sts ...

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Making the handle

Join yarn at one end of a 32, ch 2, tr 30, dc 1 (32 sts in all).  Next row, ch 2, tr into 2nd space, tr 28, dc 1 (31 sts in all).
 
Using this stitch pattern  - ch 2, tr into 2nd space, tr until last space, dc into last space - continue decreasing 1 st per row until 8 sts remain. 

Cont. straight for further 29 rows, stitch pattern per row of ch 2, tr into first space, tr 5, dc 1.

Next row, ch 2, tr into first space, tr 6, then dc into last space (so 1 x tr and 1 x dc in same space).  You should now have 9 sts.  Cont. this stitch pattern, increasing 1 st per row, until 31 sts.
 
Final row as above (making 32 sts in all),  but keep a loose tension, or your work won't stretch wide enough to join to side of bag.

It's the ch 2/dc 1 at the start/end of each row gives the handle its curved shape.

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With darning needle, join edge of handle to side of bag matching up the 32 sts with corresponding spaces ...

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For the finishing touch, hook a row of trebles in sets of 3 into the spaces along the top line of the bag and handle seams.  Voila!

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So there you go ~ a really useful bag that you could put all sorts of stuff in.  Of course now that mine is full of yarn, it's unlikely to be used for anything else!



Wednesday 18 February 2015

Have hook, will crochet.

I don't recall at what age I first picked up a crochet hook, but I do remember making my very first chain stitch ... and the next, and the next ... and eventually ending up with an enormous ball of chain stitch made from various scrap bits of yarn along with the notion of entering the Guinness Book of Records for the longest crochet chain ever made.  I also remember making a granny square waistcoat ~ I must have been twelve/thirteen at the time ~ but then schoolwork and exams and the rigours of being a teenager left no time for hobbies.

It wasn't until my early 20's that I picked up a hook again.  I was living on the Oxford Canal at the time, and spent many a happy hour sitting on the roof of my boat with lovely friends, chatting, crocheting blankets, porthole doilies and cabin lace, and drinking tea.

In my late 20's I moved off the canal onto dry land.  I didn't pick up my hooks again for years, and it's only in the last couple (I'm now in my mid 40's) that I started hooking again in earnest.  Now ... I'm not saying that I'm a crochet expert, far from it in fact ~ there are many, many stitches that I've not even attempted yet.  All I know is that I need to crochet.  It calms my overthinking brain.  It "burns off the crazy".  And it's less fattening than binging on cake. 

So my plan for this little blog, as I expand my crocheting skills, is to fill it up with various original creations and projects and useful stuff and info.  That's if I'm not too busy hooking to post.

© Hooker Chick